I am slightly inclined to think that these type of questions are really off topic. They are not really android related. Since the answer to these questions are ALWAYS a tool to sync outlook with your GOOGLE account, not the actual device.
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Ryan ConradJun 27 '11 at 13:50

To give the OP the benefit of the doubt, it's usually unclear to a new Android user that their devices sync to Google services.
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ChahkJun 27 '11 at 13:52

I agree, which is why I didn't actually vote to close it or anything...
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Ryan ConradJun 27 '11 at 13:57

3 Answers
3

In Outlook, export your Contacts into a coma-delimited text file (.CSV). Depending on the version of MS Outlook you are running, the location of this feature may be under a different menu item.

Open up a browser, go to Gmail and login with the same Google account you use on your Android phone.

Click on the "Contacts" link, then click on the "More actions" button and select the "Import" option.

Now navigate to wherever you have saved the CSV file from step 1 and select it.

After the import process completed, your Gmail account should now have all of your Outlook contacts.

On your Android phone ensure that your Google account is set to synchronize the contacts by going to Menu -> Settings -> Accounts & sync, selecting your Google account and ensuring that there is a checkmark next to "Contacts".

Also make sure you are allowing background data and auto-sync on the Previous screen.

Again tap on your Google account and un-check/re-check the box next to "Contacts" to force an immediate sync.

Wait several minutes and check the Contacts app - all of your exported contacts from Outlook should now be on your phone.

Keep in mind that this is a one-time, one-way sync. If you want to have any changes you make in Outlook to automatically sync to your Android phone, you will need a 3rd-party application on your Windows machine that will auto-upload your changes to your Google account.

Under tools there should be a MessageSave command that will allow you to export your contacts to a .vcf file, which you can put on your sd card and import from the contacts application on your phone.

This is a link to doing the same thing with the goal of exporting for Mac devices, but should work the same, and this is a detailed step by step to bulk export to a single vcard. Both should do the same thing, and both should get your contacts to your Android phone!